BIS 10 Lecture Notes - Lecture 9: Dna Replication, Central Dogma Of Molecular Biology, Genetic Variation

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Understand how a gene encodes a protein. Describe how mutations in genes affect the corresponding proteins. All humans are about 99. 9% similar in their dna. The 0. 1% difference (1/1000 bases) accounts for variation in skin and hair color, height and weight, behavior, health, etc Small difference account for most of the obvious differences we see. The central dogma is key to understanding the basis of variation and heredity. Replication (dna dna: dna: self-templating genetic material encodes the blueprint; capable of variation, dna polymerase copies the dna. Transcription (dna rna: rna: convert info in dna into proteins, genes get used to make mrna, which are working copies of the genes. Translation (rna protein: protein: catalysts and workhouses. Dna polymerase, an enzyme that walks along the dna and copies it. In double-stranded dna, %a = %t %g = %c why: cha(cid:396)gaff"s rule, for the complementary pairing, base pairing.

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